- George Mason agricultural tool is another step closer to helping U.S. farmers, thanks to NSF supportAugust 13, 2024
The user-inspired CropSmart Digital Twin provides on-demand, decision-ready solutions to take the guesswork out of crop management decisions.
- August 14, 2024
Professor John Cantiello reviews the literature to find out who is cheating, how, and how to head it off
- August 9, 2024
As George Mason doctoral student Jericho McLeod reviewed literature on disease transmission as part of his PhD work, he and George Mason professor Eduardo López noticed a gap in the models and now seek to correct it.
- August 8, 2024
With the support of a 4-VA award, George Mason researcher Sabine Doebel had the opportunity to collaborate with colleague Angeline Lillard, a widely respected developmental psychologist at the University of Virginia.
- August 6, 2024
The economic data on climate and business outcomes paints a picture of profound disruption beneath a placid-seeming surface.
- August 5, 2024
Mechanical engineer Jeffrey Moran, whose lab focuses on self-propelled micro- and nanoparticles, has loved outer space since childhood. Now, one of his experiments, exploring aerosol thermophoresis, will be carried out on the International Space Station.Â
- July 30, 2024
Through 4-VA@Mason, º£½ÇÉçÇø faculty members have embarked on new pilot research projects in collaboration with higher education institutions throughout Virginia.
- July 30, 2024
Did Homo naledi bury their dead? A Netflix documentary says yes, but new research published by George Mason anthropology professor Kimberly Foecke says no.
- July 25, 2024
Researchers in George Mason’s Center for Infectious Disease Research (CIDR) and Tulane National Primate Research Center conducted a breakthrough proof-of-concept study, published in Nature’s Gene Therapy, that found a human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-like virus particle that could cease the need for lifelong medications.
- July 24, 2024
Are you a fan of Netflix’s Bridgerton? Can you see yourself hanging out with the rest of the Ton attending extravagant balls in over-the-top gowns? Well before you do, you might want a quick lesson on the real traditions that took place during the Regency Era, and Dina Copelman, associate professor emerita of history and cultural studies at º£½ÇÉçÇø, tells all about the facts and the fiction of all three seasons of the Shondaland drama.